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squash and rutabaga are often served mashed
polenta with your favourite pasta sauce
serve those mashed potatoes cold as potato salad
refried beans
hummus
almost any soup can be whizzed with a stick blender and seems like normal food
custards, both sweet and savoury
pumpkin pie (without the crust)
rice or tapioca pudding (cooked very soft or pureed if needed)
yogurt
oatmeal or cream of wheat with lots of brown sugar and a pat of butter
those little cups of applesauce come in lots of different fruit combinations
omelets, casseroles, bananas, avocados, cottage cheese, smoothies, homemade cream of tomato soup, shepherd's pie, mashed sweet potatoes. Salmon pie without crust Look online for some recipes with these ingredients. Make sure water intake is good to prevent dehydration on a soft diet. Hope you find some good recipes for your mom.
I would make them a bit thicker with added veggies like carrots, sweet potato rather than flour, pasta or rice.
I would process them as much as I needed to. I would portion them into 2 cup Mason or Ball jars and pop them in the freezer.
A few of the soups I made were:
Loaded Baked Potato soup, Split Pea with ham, Stuffed pepper or a stuffed cabbage soup, Beef Barley, Tomato soup (I would roast pounds and pounds of tomatoes if I happened to see them at the close out corner of the store)
One of the other things that I made for him and he loved...he had always been a pizza guy would eat it anytime he could. I made the Cauliflower Pizza crust, pre baked all the toppings and he could eat that with no problem, later I did process it and while it did not look like pizza it did taste good.
Grits or cream of wheat with an egg cooked on top of it. I started adding the egg for an extra protein boost.
I also switched his dinner and breakfast. He was more alert in the morning and I started giving him his largest meal then so breakfast was often the soup or the girts with egg, lunch might be scrambled eggs or yogurt with fruit and dinner again yogurt or cream of wheat.
I would also make pudding, custard. He loved Key Lime pie so I would make the filling and pour it into little ramekins and bake that. I would get about 5 or 6 and he would have that mid afternoon sometimes.
As far as appetizing goes what you puree may not look great but the flavor is there. When I was a kid we took care of my Grandma and my Dad would process our dinner and put it on a plate for her just like our meal, a mound of beef or whatever (he would use the gravy to thin meats so that it could process), a spoon full of the veggie, a scoop of potato or whatever else there was. She was able to eat and identify what she was eating. Far different than tossing everything into the blender and having one pureed mixture on the plate.
Also made “oopsie rolls”
as a soft food/bread substitute he didn’t need to chew. Recipe is on the Internet. I’d make a batch and freeze them - thaw for a few seconds in the microwave.
BTW thanks to everyone who took the time to reply. So very much appreciated.
On another note, we had a family member who had no teeth for 6 months and he said pureed steak was wonderful - it was some of the veggies that were awful.
You can also use Junior Baby Foods!
We like smoothies. You can add fruit and nuts to the smoothie which will be chopped up and blended in. Even spinach, carrots, and other veggies can be blended in.
I assume that a medical person advised you to prepare soft foods? If so, was a suggestion made for a videoscopic swallowing test? In my experience, this is done routinely when someone has difficulty swallowing, in order to determine what the cause is, and prescribe the appropriate diet.
It's not an invasive procedure, but needs to be conducted by a speech pathologist, using hospital or lab equipment. The patient is given various foods of various consistency, all of which are monitored remotely through a machine which allows the pathologist to determine which might be swallowed and which might be aspirated.
A modified diet is then prescribed; there are different levels. As someone wrote, there are mechanical soft and pureed categories. I received several page printouts with very specific guidelines on what can and can't be eaten. And it's quite surprising; foods that would seem to be appropriate aren't.
The diet will also address whether liquids need to be thickened; this is important, as in some cases straws cannot be used, and water or other fluids absolutely need to be thickened to avoid aspiration.
Ice cream is a good example; b/c it's soft, it would seem to fit into a dysphagia diet. Not so with all pureed foods. It melts too quickly, becomes liquid, and can be aspirated.
I tricked it by giving my father a few teaspoonfuls of ice cream at a time so he could eat it when it still had some solidity. As soon as it melted, it was ver boten. And obviously, any ice cream should not contain nuts, chocolate chunks, cherries, or other foods that require chewing.
And you're right; it's not very appetizing. I did some research, called food companies, and ordered brochures, some of which used techniques to present the food in a more appealing fashion. Still, my father wasn't particularly excited by pureed foods.
The dietician/therapist can recommend foods, diets and products that can help.